Armed men attack Yemeni journalist in Sana'a

New York, April 12, 2012--Prominent Yemeni journalist Muhammad
al-Maqaleh was assaulted by armed men affiliated with a tribal group while visiting
a government official's house, the journalist told the Committee to Protect
Journalists today. Al-Maqaleh has widely reported on the activities of tribal
groups in Yemen.

Al-Maqaleh, editor of the news website Aleshteraki for the Yemeni Socialist Party, visited
Defense Minister Mohamed Nasser Ahmed's residence on Saturday in the capital,
Sana'a, to inquire about the large presence of armed men dressed in military
uniforms in the neighborhood, he told CPJ. When the journalist began speaking
to the men outside the house--who were aligned with Yemen's most influential
tribal group, the al-Ahmar family--they began attacking him with their rifle
butts and threatened him repeatedly, news reports said. The journalist did not have any injuries, but
the group broke the windshield of his car, al-Maqaleh told CPJ. Although the
defense minister was present during the assault, he did not stop the men
because he did not have authority over them, al-Maqaleh said.

Various armed elements have been stationed in residential
areas in Sana'a for several months, claiming to protect citizens and officials,
but actually trying to intimidate them, al-Maqaleh said. The journalist said he
believed the men attacked him because they knew he was the journalist who had
repeatedly criticized the activities of the armed factions affiliated with the tribal groups and were angered
by him speaking out against them.

"The attack on Muhammad al-Maqaleh shows just how dangerous
it is to be a journalist in Yemen when even the defense minister looks on
helplessly when armed men beat a critical reporter," said Robert Mahoney, CPJ's
deputy director. "The government must enforce the rule of law and protect
journalists from assault."

Al-Maqaleh, a longtime critic of the Yemeni government, has
faced severe harassment and detention at the hands of authorities in the past, CPJ
research shows. He was seized by
unidentified men in September 2009 and kept in government custody for months.

CPJ has documented a stream of attacks against journalists
in Yemen since political unrest erupted last year, including deaths, physical
assaults, detentions, harassments, and attacks on news outlets.